Abstract

The twitch-potentiating effects of opioids in the frog's skeletal muscle which are naloxone resistant and nonstereospecific were further studied. The rapid kinetics of the onset and of the offset (following washout) of the opioid effect indicates that the site for this action is the surface membrane of the muscle fibre. On the other hand, the lack of any twitch-potentiating effect by naloxone methylbromide, a quaternary derivative of naloxone, suggests that opioids which potentiate the twitch must enter the lipid phase of the membrane to act. Intracellular microelectrode experiments revealed no relation between the opioid effects on membrane electrical events and twitch potentiation. Blocking slow calcium channels with D-600 did not modify the opioid-induced twitch potentiation. The twitch potentiation was antagonized by increasing the extracellular calcium concentration, [Ca2+]o, to 8.64 mM. The effects of closely spaced multiple electrical pulses revealed that the opioids decreased the summated response relative to predrug controls. The results suggest that opioids facilitate the process of excitation-contraction coupling in the frog's skeletal muscle by the release of an additional amount of "trigger calcium" following a single electrical stimulus, thereby generating a potentiated twitch.

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